Speakers
Steve Badanes
is nationally recognized for designing and building innovative
projects--from homes to playgrounds to public sculptures. He is an
expert on energy-efficient building techniques and speaks on the social
responsibilities of architects and the role of architecture in building
communities. Steve is a founder of Jersey Devil, an architectural firm
comprised of skilled craftsmen, architects, inventors, and artists
"committed to the interdependence of building and design." Jersey Devil
architects/builders live on-site during construction of their designs,
which are known for energy-efficiency and innovative use of materials.
At the University of Washington, Steve holds the Howard Wright Endowed
Chair and leads design/build studios that have focused on community
service projects for nonprofit organizations in the Seattle area. Steve
attended Wesleyan University for undergraduate studies and Princeton
University, where he received his Master of Architecture.
Heavy Trash
is an anonymous arts organization of architects, artists, and urban
planners, Heavy Trash creates large, disposable art objects that draw
community and media attention to specific urban issues. By explaining a
particular urban problem and suggesting a solution, Heavy Trash seeks
to provoke dialogue among citizens. Heavy Trash's work has attracted
local and national media, ranging from The Los Angeles Times to The New York Times and Adbusters.
Patrick Rhodes,
in 2001, formed Project Locus, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation, to
design and build community structures in areas of need, and to develop
his growing interest in teaching. Since that time, he has worked in
communities across the country including Los Angeles, Boston and
Baltimore and has worked with design professionals, students and
academic institutions across the country. After Hurricane Katrina,
Patrick began working through Project Locus in New Orleans to aid in
the rebuilding process. During the summer of 2006 with 35 student
volunteers, he designed and built the House of Dance and Feathers Mardi
Gras Indian Museum and Community Center in the Lower Ninth Ward. Now
teaching at Tulane University, Patrick will continue his work in New
Orleans and elsewhere through engaging students in the development and
construction of spaces in poor and underserved communities. Patrick is
a 1996 graduate of the University of Florida architecture program, and
earned his Master of Architecture from the Southern California
Institute of Architecture in 1999.
Ronald Lewis
is the founder of Tupelo Street Neighborhood Association, established
in 1992 to maintain the quality of life and upkeep of the neighborhood.
Ron is also a Folk/Traditional Craft Artist in the Social and Pleasure
Club Tradition, an historian and a youth educator specializing in
hands-on and visual teaching methods. In 2003 he founded the "House of
Dance & Feathers" neighborhood museum and educational resource
center for cultural history of Social and Pleasure Clubs and Mardi Gras
Indians, Lower-Ninth Ward Neighborhood History, and Musical history. In
2004, he was awarded both a Certificate of Appreciation and
Congressional Recognition, "in recognition of outstanding and
invaluable service to the community, from William Jefferson and a
Certificate of Merit from the New Orleans City Council.
Justin Lee
worked for various architectural offices in New York and Boston before
joining the Renzo Piano Building Workshop in Genova, Italy, in 2005. He
has worked on the new California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco,
the Port Development Project in Oslo and the Trans National Place in
Boston. He collaborated with the MIT Media Lab (Senseable City
Laboratory) on the Tsunami Safe(r) Project on the design of the Tsunami
Safe(r) House and participated in the research trip to Sri Lanka in the
summer 2005 to research the post tsunami conditions and oversee the
construction of the Tsunami Safe(r) House prototype. Born in Hong Kong
in 1975, Justin earned his Bachelor of Arts with honors in studio arts
from Wesleyan University in 1999, and his Master of Architecture from
the Harvard Graduate School of Design in 2004.
Scott Shall
is an assistant professor of architecture at the University of
Louisiana at Lafayette. Scott's work and teaching is based upon an
ongoing study into issues ranging from sustainability and innovative
materials of design to the cognitive patterns of the 21st century
student. Through this work, Scott has developed a unique
guerrilla-style design process, which he teaches to his students
through a series of design-abroad projects offered every spring and
summer semester. To aid this work, Scott has founded the International
Design Clinic (IDC)--a registered not-for-profit dedicated to giving
students of design to use their skills as designers to aid a world in
need. Every summer, Scott and the IDC team up with UL Lafayette's study
abroad program to send a team of students to a community in need in a
foreign land. Once in place, the students work to use the materials at
hand to design and construct an intervention that will aid their host
community. Not surprisingly, the fruits of this work have had a
profound impact upon Scott's growing architectural practice, sgsa+d,
producing a series of projects which root themselves in the materials
at hand to create a provoking and thoughtful response to the unique
conditions of SW Louisiana.
Phoebe Crisman is
a practicing architect, urbanist, and Assistant Professor of
Architecture at the University of Virginia. She practiced with firms in
Chicago, Cambridge, and Hong Kong prior to establishing Crisman+Petrus
Architects in Charlottesville, Va. In her teaching, research, and
practice, Phoebe investigates fragmentary and overlooked places,
processes and materials. She has published numerous essays, most
recently "Outside the Frame: A Critical Analysis of Urban Image
Surveys" in the journal Places. Her forthcoming book, Site Out of Mind,
examines design strategies founded on an ethical mode of attentiveness
to unacknowledged places. Phoebe is currently designing strategies for
the co-existence of waterfront industry and ecological regeneration in
several projects along the Elizabeth River in Virginia's Hampton Roads
region. Funded by a Virginia Environmental Endowment Grant, she has
just completed work on a Sustainable Revitalization Plan for 330 acres
of industrial land at Money Point, in collaboration with The Elizabeth
River Project and the UVA Institute for Environmental Negotiation.
Since January 2006, Phoebe has led an interdisciplinary team of UVa
students and diverse community partners to design and fabricate The
Learning Barge--a floating, self-sustaining environmental education
field station on the Elizabeth River. Phoebe was educated at Harvard
University and Carnegie Mellon, and conducted post-graduate research as
a Netherlands-America Fulbright Fellow in Amsterdam.
Jori Erdman
is an Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies at the
Clemson University School of Architecture. She has received the ACSA
New Faculty Teaching Award and an AIA Education Award Honorable
Mention. Jori was recently appointed as Design Editor for the Journal of Architectural Education.
Studio South, a research driven design-build program, which Jori
co-founded with Patricio del Real, was the recipient of the 2004 ACSA
Collaborative Practice Award. The work produced by students and faculty
in Studio South has been presented nationally and internationally. Jori
has received funding to conduct research on the history of design-build
programs in schools of architecture and is developing a book proposal
on this topic. She is a graduate of the University of Virginia and
Columbia University as well as a licensed architect in California.
Nils Gore
is an Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Kansas
and is a licensed architect in Kansas. Prior to teaching at KU, he
taught at the Boston Architectural Center and at Mississippi State
University. His recent research focuses on design strategies, which
draw on 'play,' with real materials, at a real scale, as a means of
developing design solutions not likely to be found in the space of the
imagination. Through design/construct projects and activities, students
find that hands-on making, coupled with traditional design media
sponsors innovation. Nils' other research looks at the processes and
tectonics of construction as a source of architectural ideas. Student
design/build projects demonstrate how ideas about skill, craft,
materials, fabrication and construction can serve as potent sources of
architectural ideas. Nils earned his Bachelor of Architecture from
Kansas State University and Master of Architecture from the Harvard
Graduate School of Design.
Robert Corser, AIA
studied architecture at the University of Virginia and at Harvard's
Graduate School of Design where he was recipient of the Peter Rice
Prize for the integration of architecture and engineering. A licensed
architect in California, he has practiced in San Francisco, and most
recently in London where he was a project architect in the Advanced
Geometry Unit at ARUP. Robert has taught at Syracuse University and
since 2005 at the University of Kansas where he specializes in digital
design and fabrication. Robert's research and teaching explores the
convergence of design and construction technologies and the impact of
new tools and processes on this relationship. His work deals with
historic, current and emerging manifestations of technology and design.
Areas of current work include parametric digital design strategies,
numerically controlled physical prototyping and fabrication, high
performance materials ans systems, and digital design collaboration. He
is a founding member of a consortium dedicated to promoting high
performance design through research and development in the area of
building technologies.
Lori Ryker grew up in
Texas and has lived and worked in Boston, New York City, Portland,
North Dakota, Alabama, and Basel, Switzerland. She makes her home in
Livingston, Montana where she is the executive director and founder of
Artemis Institute, and is a partner, along with Brett W. Nave, of
Ryker/Nave Design. She is the author of Mockbee Coker: Thought and Process, Off The Grid: Modern Homes + Alternative Energy and the forthcoming Off The Grid Homes. Lori is a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Architectural Education.
Lori, along with her partner Brett W. Nave, received funding in 2000
from the Graham Foundation for their research entitled: "Dialogue:
Design, Construction and the Natural Environment." This research,
located in southwest Montana, is focused on helping a community come to
a clearer understanding of its relationship with and impact upon the
larger ecological environment in which it exists through holistically
grounded design and build practices. Lori earned her Master of
Architecture from Harvard Graduate School of Design and her PhD from
Texas A& M University.
Vincent Petrarca
has one core belief, that the influence of construction on design and
design on construction should be the fundamental premise that shapes
the process of every project. The two separate but undeniably
integrated firms, Tonic Design and Tonic Construction, of which Vincent
is currently a partner, formalize this concept. After graduating from
North Carolina State University's School of Design and spending 7 years
at a traditional architectural firm, his first independent project was
the ‘Honeymoon Cottage’, a home that he and his wife designed and built
during their engagement and first year of marriage. The house won a NC
AIA and SARC. This experience shifted both his approach to architecture
and his focus, resulting in numerous construction-led design projects
executed by an energetic and talented team at Tonic Design and Tonic
Construction. Vincent strives to contribute to the existing context of
modern architecture by creating and realizing highly personalized
projects for clients in North Carolina, which enhance the lives of
those who inhabit the spaces.
Luke Clark Tyler,
originally from the Pacific Northwest, earned his Bachelor of
Architecture from Cornell University in 2006. During school, he had
several internships with corporate and for-profit architecture firms in
both New York and San Francisco. After completing his education, he
turned to Design Corps to explore the role of an architect in a world
full of social needs. Design Corps connected him with the Task Force
for the Homeless, a homeless service and advocacy agency in Atlanta. He
now lives and works at the Task Force as the Design Coordinator for the
renovation of their historic 100,000SF building located in downtown
Atlanta.
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SFI1 (2000)
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SFI6 (2006)
SFI7 (2007)
SFI8 (2008)
SFI9 (2009)
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